Valentina Faihs, Johannes Ring, Knut Brockow, Kirsten Beyer, Ernst Rietschel, Sabine Schnadt, Britta Stöcker, Regina Treudler, Margitta Worm, Ludger Klimek
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People who have suffered from anaphylaxis often experience far-reaching consequences in everyday life. Unfortunately, discharge management after successful acute treatment is often still inadequate. In order to prevent further reactions in the future and improve the patient’s quality of life, there are several points that should be addressed or followed upon discharge from acute treatment. These include taking a detailed medical history to identify potential triggers, documenting the acute therapy, recommending further allergological assessment and prescribing an emergency kit for self-help including an adrenaline auto-injector—with education and practice on how to use it, including a written emergency plan. In addition, recommendations for avoiding potential triggers and information on patient organizations are helpful. This article aims to provide an up-to-date overview of discharge management after successful acute treatment of anaphylaxis. Remember: “After anaphylaxis also means potentially before the next anaphylaxis.”
期刊介绍:
Allergo Journal International is the official Journal of the German Society for Applied Allergology (AeDA) and the Austrian Society for Allergology and Immunology (ÖGAI). The journal is a forum for the communication and exchange of ideas concerning the various aspects of allergy (including related fields such as clinical immunology and environmental medicine) and promotes German allergy research in an international context. The aim of Allergo Journal International is to provide state of the art information for all medical and scientific disciplines that deal with allergic, immunological and environmental diseases. Allergo Journal International publishes original articles, reviews, short communications, case reports, and letters to the editor. The articles cover topics such as allergic, immunological and environmental diseases, the latest developments in diagnosis and therapy as well as current research work concerning antigens and allergens and aspects related to occupational and environmental medicine. In addition, it publishes clinical guidelines and position papers approved by expert panels of the German, Austrian and Swiss Allergy Societies.
All submissions are reviewed in single-blind fashion by at least two reviewers.
Originally, the journal started as a German journal called Allergo Journal back in 1992. Throughout the years, English articles amounted to a considerable portion in Allergo Journal. This was one of the reasons to extract the scientific content and publish it in a separate journal. Hence, Allergo Journal International was born and now is the international continuation of the original German journal. Nowadays, all original content is published in Allergo Journal International first. Later, selected manuscripts will be translated and published in German and included in Allergo Journal.